Janet Soskice

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Janet_Soskice an entity of type: Thing

Janet Martin Soskice (* 16. Mai 1951) ist eine römisch-katholische Theologin und Philosophin. Sie hat eine Professur für philosophische Theologie in Cambridge, ihre Forschungsschwerpunkte sind u. a. die Symbolik des Geschlechts, das Verhältnis von Glaube und Wissenschaft und die Sprache des Religiösen. rdf:langString
Janet Martin Soskice (born 16 May 1951) is a Canadian-born English Roman Catholic theologian and philosopher. Soskice is educated at Somerville College, Oxford. She is professor of philosophical theology and a fellow of Jesus College at the University of Cambridge. Her theological and philosophical work has dealt with the role of women in Christianity, religious language, the relationship between science and religion. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Janet Soskice
rdf:langString Janet Soskice
rdf:langString Janet Soskice
rdf:langString Janet Soskice
rdf:langString Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
xsd:date 1951-05-16
xsd:integer 42219259
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xsd:date 1951-05-16
rdf:langString Philosophy
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rdf:langString theology
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rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Canadian
rdf:langString Janet Martin Soskice
rdf:langString Janet Martin Soskice (* 16. Mai 1951) ist eine römisch-katholische Theologin und Philosophin. Sie hat eine Professur für philosophische Theologie in Cambridge, ihre Forschungsschwerpunkte sind u. a. die Symbolik des Geschlechts, das Verhältnis von Glaube und Wissenschaft und die Sprache des Religiösen.
rdf:langString Janet Martin Soskice (born 16 May 1951) is a Canadian-born English Roman Catholic theologian and philosopher. Soskice is educated at Somerville College, Oxford. She is professor of philosophical theology and a fellow of Jesus College at the University of Cambridge. Her theological and philosophical work has dealt with the role of women in Christianity, religious language, the relationship between science and religion. Her book The Sisters of Sinai details the history of the discovery of the Syriac Sinaiticus by Agnes and Margaret Smith. Soskice has also written that she became religious following a very "dramatic but banal" religious experience.
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